my lo, almost 2, used to fuss if we would deviate from the route to the park starting about 6 months ago. He would fuss and calm down if we turned to go to the park. Now, he flips out if we go a different way, so walking away from the park in the opposite direction or going on any walk and not going to the park. Is this the beginning of insisting on the same route to school? He usually will freak out for a minute and then calm down, but today he was really flipping out so I turned around and headed to the park. I then took him out of his little coupe car and he just turned it around as soon as we walked there and insisted on walking home. There was nobody at the park, but it seemed like he just wanted to go there and then leave, like completing a goal or something.
He kept turning around and looking at me smiling really big when I started walking there. Is this anxiety? Sensory? help please. Is this something aba would help?
he doesn't care about a routine in the sense that we can wake up and either go out to eat, go shopping, go swimming, or go to the museum. So no order to events other than this so far.
Re: insistence on same route
This is kind of hard to explain, particularly if your ASD child is your first (like with me), but with a typical child they like to know what comes next. If you present something different they might be a bit shy or resist a bit but nothing big - honestly a lot of them wouldn't even notice something as minor as a change in route as long as nothing else changed. With an ASD child the most minor change can result in a meltdown (change in weather, route, hat worn on the trip, etc.) For my older DS just doing the school/park/gym was at the absolute top end of his ability so any minor change outside of that would set him off. It's like normal toddler anxiety times 1000.
The rule in my house is if you start "needing" something, I'm probably going to change it. Dinner table positions, order of routine, car seat positions, etc. My mantra is "what will happen if we change?" I constantly enforce that change isn't a big deal, just something we deal with. Honestly a sibling is great for this. I frequently don't have the option to cater to either of their whims.